compromise
The Gateway
VOL. LVI, No. 28, UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA, EDMONTON, ALBERTA
,
in quebec?
THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1966, FOUR PAGES
—Neil Driscoll photo
HIS PEDALS DON’T WORK—lIt’s a known fact that some automobile engines won’t turn
over at —20 degrees, and jumper cables have been more common than skipping ropes in uni-
versity parking lots this week. Here, two stranded motorists struggle with their frozen beast
in SUB lot Wednesday—only with more success than most.
Honoraria, special benefits sought
House committee may resign
unless agreement reached
By LORRAINE MINICH
Men students in Lister Hall may
be without a residence house com-
mittee unless an agreement with
the administration is worked out
before Jan. 31.
In & letter sent to Provost A. A.
Boe last fall, the Men’s Residence
House Committee threatened to re-
sign Jan. 31 unless certain de-
mands were met. In another letter
sent Wednesday, the students again
outlined difficulties in residence
and areas which require investig-
ation.
The Edmonton (ee ee
Predicts continu
Weather with sunny des ‘apd light
winds.
Last night’s low -27...
high today ~20.
Low tonight ‘and high Friday are
-30 and -20.
Predicted
Committee members
have been
negotiating with the Erinn istration
since the original letter last fall
regarding demands onoraria
and special benefits for committee
members’ rooms.
Prof. Ryan told The Gateway
Wednesday neither of the letters
could actually be considered a
threat to the administration. In-
stead, he said, they are an appeal
for co-operation.
This is the first year that
residence government is completely
student-run. According to Pro
Ryan, student capauceient is the
best way to run the residences.
“Considering the only admini-
strative icra at in residence
is an assistant dean, the students
have done a remarkably respons-
ible job,” said Prof. Ryan
Prof. Ryan agreed committee
members are going more work than
they should to and they
should not have to bear the brunt
of attacks by disgruntled students.
“Committee members have had
to act as bellmen for students who
“When
these ace pein? they lonically
é
suggested payment for their ser-
vices.”
Prof. Ryan suggested the House
Committee members be given stu-
dent activity awards rather than
wages.
It’s only fair that committee
members should have better rooms,
an extra-curricular award, and
credit on the transcript of records
when they eee the university,
said Prof. Rya
The committee heads need help
in enforcing discipline, said Prof.
Ryan. the students in
residence are freshmen who don’t
know about residence government.
“The committee is doing a good
job, but they need full co-oper-
ation, especially from some senior
students whe, shave been setting a
bad example.’
The publicity which has been
residence at a time when it needs
help.
“It’s about time The Gateway
decided whether its wants news or
the truth,” said Prof. Ryan.
Quebec class
boycott ends
Committees formed to study
employment and financial aid
By WILF DAY
Canadian University Press Staff Writer
MONTREAL—WMore than 27,000 Quebec students, on strike
this week protesting a three-week extension of their school
term, today returned to classes after reaching a compromise
agreement with the Quebec government.
Under the agreement, the schoo
The Quebec students have argu-
cut
school students in Quebec.
The second committee is design-
ed to establish an employment
policy so the government can assist
students in locating summer jobs.
Announcement of the agreement
was made late Wednesday night,
following a meeting among Michel
Delorme, president of the Quebec
Specialized Students’ Federation
(FEESQ); Robert aeap president
of the Union Generale des Etudi-
ants du Quebec (UGEQ), and Que-
bec Education Minister Paul Gerin-
Lajoie.
Delorme came out of the meet-
ing proclaiming a “victory” for the
students because they have been
scheduled to return to classes to-
day, each of the 60 schools being
picketed will take a vote on accept-
ance or rejection of the agreement.
Delorme said he expects the vote
to go in favor of acceptance, but if
any schools reject the offer, there
will be study sessions held until a
suitable settlement can be worked
out.
The strike began Monday after a
series of strike votes at the tech-
nical and specialized schools across
the province were held, when the
education minister refused to allow
students to appeal the ar week
extension of the school t
The votes had Bee raged’ 90 per
cent in favor of the strike. Only
one school, Granby, turned it down.
Students picketed zoe while
policemen stood by during the
week, but no students crossed the
picket nice and no incidents were
reported.
Pe up or else!
After Jan. 31, a student’s
registration is subject to can-
cellation for non-payment of
fees and the student to ex-
clusion from classes.
Fees are payable to the
cashier in the Administration
Building. Please present your
identification card with your
payment.
PC-Socred
coalition
denied
By SHEILA BALLARD
president of the Alberta
Social Credit League savs the UAC
Progressive Conservative-Social
Credit merger appears to be a PC
publicity stunt.
“I hate to think it was engineer-
ed but the UAC Social Credit group
has never asked for any affiliation
or assistance from us at any time,”
said Orvis Kennedy.
The two Calgary ee merged
last weekend to run under the PC
banner in the upcoming UAC
model parliament elections.
Mr. Kennedy discounted the
claim of the young Social Credit
group that the move was made be-
cause of lack of funds.
He said since the group had
never approached the Alberta
league for assistance this indicated
their action was little more than a
move to embarrass Social Crediters.
Mr. Kennedy contends the amal-
gamation defeats the purpose of
model parliament.
“Since the purpose of campus
political parties is to explain and
advocate the policies of ihe Jee
ticular parties a merger of a
parties ee this impossible?
Mr. Kennedy.
Certainly had the group n
officially affiliated with the league
we would have discouraged such
a move on these grounds, said Mr.
Kennedy.
The Edmonton campus Socred
leader, Dale Enarson, says the Cal-
group is not affiliated with
Canadian Students’ Social
Credit Federation.
He agreed the move was possibly
a PC publicity stunt.
“Their claim of having no funds
is a pretty feeble excuse because —
assistance is available if they go
prone. the proper channels,” says
Enarso
Asked if the views of the Socred
aa
never expressed their policies.”
“I might co-operate if I foun
be mas common ground but I see no
to dissolve the campus
Social Credit party to become part
and parcel of the PC party,”
Enarson added.
The Gateway
Member of the Canadian University Press
Winner N. A. M. MacKenzie trophy for excellence in features 1965-66. Winner Montreal
Star trophy for excellence in news photography 1965-66.
Second in Bracken trophy com-
for editorial writing 1965-66 and third in Southam trophy competition for general
66.
Eecuitence 1965-
Editor-in-Chief -
Managing Editor ............... Bill Miller
News Edito’ Al Bromling
Asst. News Editor, yaa Chomiak
Sports aoe n Campbell
EDITORIAL: CUP Dat ton shee Bradley.
Bassek. Production ello Joe Will. Office Manager
Bruce Ferrier, Bill Miller, Linda Strand.
’
STAFF THIS ISSUE—One more to go! Bioyes for Wedn
feted Ralph eA btw eenae pass hg are, Richard
c s truly, Harvey Thom:
by the students’ union of
, the print shop ga and your:
The eateoay is published Sally this week
in-Chief is responsible for
for Wednesday edition—7 p.m. Sun
advertising—4:30
—8,300. Authorized as secon
postage in cash. Postage paid at Edmon
lay: adverti
Desk: Jim sale Cartoonists:
Editorial ikssictont: Carole Kaye.
esday were Lorraine Minich, Lorraine Allison, Sheila
all material published herein.
sing—4: Pp.
Monday. Advertising aNchober Alex Hardy. Office phon
nd-class pole ee the Post Office Department, Ottawa, se for payment of
Don Sellar
Associate Editor ..
Page Five ........... finde Strand
Fine Arts Editor é “Yehn Thompson
Photo Editor... Neil Driscoll
Dale Drever, Peter
nns. Editorial Board: Don Sellar, Doug
Librarian: Lois Berry.
. Doug Walker
Msg Gloria Skuba, Marg Penn, Quick Draw
the University of Alberta. The Editor-
Final copy deadline (including short short items):
m. Thursday; for Friday Bola p.m. Tuesday,
33-1155. Circulation
PAGE TWO
THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1966
caught in the act
At its next session, the provincial Legisla-
ture will consider sweeping changes in the
University Act, on the strength of a report
prepared by the University of Alberta gov-
ernors. The governors’ report makes six
fundamental recommendations—all design-
dent enrolment of about
A sparse, 37-page booklet contains these
important recommendations, which represent
the work of a committee which took two full
years to enunciate much-needed changes in
the Act. Public reaction to the report has
been practically non-existent, but already
there are signs the new act is far from flaw-
less.
rangely enough, the report is dated
November, 1965, even though it was not re-
leased to the public until a mere six weeks
before the Legislature opens. Six weeks is
hardly sufficient time for proper revisions
and public scrutiny of an act which is sup-
posedly so important to the future of the
province’s university system.
But more important than this, there is
every reason to believe there is insufficient
time for proper consideration to be given de-
tailed recommendations contained in the
document now resting yan Education Minister
Randolph McKinnon’s
For example, there is e area of student
affairs. t
already warned Students’
students are unhappy with the sections of
the act which refer to them they had better
begin preparing submissions for presentation
to a revisions committee
expressed the fear that the Legislature could
‘pass the new act without sufficiently airing
the points of view of all parties concerned.
Mr. Ryan feels, and quite rightly so, that
the act should contain a specific student af-
fairs section dealing with students’ union in-
corporation as well as the possible future in-
corporation of any parallel students’ associ-
ation such as the Graduate Students’ Associ-
tion. Also, there is the strange situation in
which students will find themselves in, if the
act is passed unchanged and they are left
without representation on the General Fac-
ulty Council—the very body which is to have
jurisdiction over student affairs.. This ob-
vious oversight on the part of the governors
committee could be typical of many others
contained in the new act
Then too, there appear to be problems in
the new act with terminology. Students’
Union President Richard Price has objected
to the use of the word control with reference
to the General Faculty Council’s jurisdiction
over student affairs. This word is certainly
much stronger than the existing expression
which involves the word jurisdiction not con-
trol.
The oe of faculty tae aa amet on
the Board of Governors of t
aly. the proposed ae in ahick Uni-
versity Commission members and Board of
arises members are to be selected and
the position of the new University Commis-
sion as a ‘‘buffer’’ between government and
academic community are all matters which,
like ‘student affairs, have not been adequate-
but six weeks out of every year cannot be
expected to set the university’s affairs in
der by tearing the new University Act to
pieces clause-by-clause and word-by-word.
The university should have done its home-
_ work, and b
Bee aient—-r t chaos.
If student affairs, an area considered one
‘of the less important:t in i on can be om
i
ant’ f
ties, and young women
rought consensus to the Manning ©
badly neglected, then what about the more
important ones? Unless the university com-
munity examines the act which will govern
it in years to come, and examines it far more
critically than has been the case, the new act
could be a piece of unparalleled bungling.
There are four weeks remaining before mS
Legislature opens—four weeks in which t
do our homework.
with left-handed weapons
fighting a middle-class, interracial society
The Gateway is affiliated with the Stu-
dent Mirror, an independent interna-
tional student press service.
ing are excerpts from a Stu
ror article by New York Times writer
Fred AP are: on the new American
student left
by fred powledge
On a recent Saturday night, a group of
University of Chicago students gathered at
n apartment for a party. There was no
liquor and no dancing. and no talk about
basketball, student policies or sex. Instead
the young men, in sport coats and without
, in skirts and black
stockings, sat on the poe and talked about
such things as ‘’com organization,’
‘powerlessness’ shoe Des yiicinotery demo-
cracy.”’
The young people in Chicago, and their
counterparts in a dozen other college com-
munities, are part of a new, small loosely-
bound intelligentsia that calls itself the new
student-left and that wants to cause funda-
mental changes in society. These young
people, or people who feel the same as they,
picketed in favor of academic tenure for
professors at Yale and St. John’s College.
Some of them participated in last year’s
New York school boycott hey organized
the Northern demonstrations and sit-ins that
followed the civil rights uprising in Selma,
Ala., and some of them went to Selma to
They believe that the civil rights
movement, the emergence of poverty as a
national cause, and the possibility of nuclear
extinction make fundamental change man-
datory. They do not deny that they are a
lot like the young radicals of the thirties in
their aspirations. Some of them, who liken
their movement to a ‘‘revolution,’” want to
be called nadia
Most of them, stir prefer to be call-
er “organizers. reply that they
are a bicartie with a small ‘d’ or socialists
with a all ’ A few like to be called
Mgeaete: Most. express contempt for any
specific labels, and they don’t mike being
called cynics. Few have allowed themselves
to develop a sense of humor about their
work; they function on a crisis footing. They
are mindful that their numbers are tiny in
comparison with the total in the nation’s
colleges. Now, as before, the great majority
of their fellow students are primarily inter-
ested in marriage, a home and a job.
rey Shero, a 23-year-old Texan,
sat in the student union building at the
University of Texas, drinking bitter in-
stitutional coffee and explaining his
own particular cynicism in this way:
“This generation has witn eet hypo-
crisy as has no other genera The
churches aren’t doing what or ‘should
be doing. There is lie after lie on tele-
i
pulated. The kind of ethics that our
parents preached are not practised, be-
cause we now see how our parents real-
ly live. We are the first generation that
grew up with the idea of annihilation.
In a situation like this, you have to go
out and form your own religion.”
e@ @ e
About 70 others were interviewed re-
cently in New York, Chicago, San Francisco,
Atlanta, Newark, Louisiana, and Austin, Tex.
Although a few displayed a tendency to de-
fend the Soviet Union as an example of. the
sort of society they want to create, the great
majority of those questioned said they were
as skeptical of Communism as they were of
any other form of political control.
eir conversations indicated it they
were neither directed nor inspired by Com
munism, as some of their critics hake a:
leged. ‘’You might say we’re Communist,“’
said one, ‘’just as you must say we're amoral
and an almost everything else.’’ Although
one of their goals is the elimination of the
evils of a middle-class society, many of them
come from middle-class, middle-income
families. They believe that the only way
out of the nation’s problems is through the
creation of a new left. They reject many
of the old leftist ee who they aeeeribe
as ‘’sellouts’’; they want to write their own
philosophy, and they onan to create a al-
liance between the millions of American
whites and Negroes who have no economic. or
political power. Most of them express skep-
ticism about their own chances of~success,
but they want to invest the rest of their lives
in the cause.
There is little talk among the acivicts
about racial integration. Some of them de-
clare that integration will be almost as evil
as segregation if it results in a complacent,
middle-class interracial society.
“The civil rights movement has a built-in
dead end,’ said one young man, ‘‘because
when most of the basic civil rights issues are
settled Pee still won’t be enough jobs for
everyon
ipaieda the college communities, some
of the young people have found student
freedom to be the issue around which
a@ movement moy be built. On the cam-
puses of a number of universities, the
student leftists are planning demonstra-
tions, marches, and political action
around the issues of conscription, aca-
demic freedom, the war in South Viet-
hope that an important
side effect will Ay increased pearbaareste|
in the organizations they rep
At present there. i is no sliabhe tn thee of the
strength of the student left. The hard core
amounts to about 500 persons. However
thousands may rally around them from time
to time in support of a given cause. In the
orth, the movement is being run by a
handful of organizations, along with a num-
ber of smaller or less important groups.
eo e ®
Students for a Democratic Society was or-
ganized in June, 1962, at Port Huron, Mich.,
by “a band of young intellectuals who got
most of their immediate inspiration from the
sit-in movement,” according to one of the
founders, Tom Hayden.
Students for a Democratic Society is af-
filiated with the League for Industrial Demo-
cracy Inc., a nonprofit educational institu-
tion founded in 1905 by Jack London, Upton
Sinclair and Clarence Darrow. It claims a
national membership of 1,700 in 44 chap-
ters, along with 50 staff members.
The W. E. B. du Bois Clubs of America
ea in San Franscico about three years
go. This organization is named for the
Negro leader who helped found the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored
People and who later turned to Communism.
~ One du Bois member on the West
Coast, Bettina Apthecker, a 20-year-
old University of California student,
explained her philosophy this way: ‘’The
basic thing is destroying or eliminating
the corporate monopolies and national-
izing the control of the industries in the
hands of the people. If this were done,
a lot of other things would follow. There
would be an elimination of the race
thing, elimination of the preparations
for war. That's the long-range thing.
On a short-term basis, we should do
whatever can be done within the pre-
sent confines of the System—things
like voter registration eel political edu-
cation.”
The du Bois Club claims a national mem-
bership of more than 1,000. The ae
Student Movement was founded in 1961 a
the Northern wing of the Southern- cated
Student nonviolent Co-ordinating Committee.
The Northern group concentrates on tutorial
programs and community organization in the
Northern Negro ghettos. :
The Student Nonviolent Co-ordinating
Committee, the inspiration for all the organ-
izations of the new eae left was founded
April 17, 1960. About 300 persons, al-
most all Negro youths Screen by the sit-
ins that had started two and one-half months ©
before in Greensboro, formed the Temporary
Student Nonviolent Co-ordinating Commit-
pasta! King Jr.’s headquarters.
oyees. ow, more than a dozen cam-
pagans later, it has 237 paid staffers.
charming
new book
published
(Having heard Jon Whyt
puffing another book suits ide
recently, we decided to ask him
to come forth with a pei Rie That
was tantamount to disaster, we
realize. But the book is ‘real,
It’s published by Lancer Books
and it’s’ written by Ted Mark.
BD cchelal footnotes will be found
below the poem. Aspiring read-
ers will number the lines to
facilitate comprehension.)
I’ve asked around: I’ve searched
and sought
The pop-art dirty book that’s
roug!
For het Edge porn’s been
Warren spahned.
My friends have said quite
latterly -
That nought compares with.
And “Fanny Hill” is scarcely
I - uo te, say
ee baie be oe. if it were
(The Bi O.P. has had it banned. )
he frigpvhky, through the
Hest: eCamncthareote” making
moan,
And castled Burroughs in the
sand,
ee the scenes in “Battle
(Which was “the book” in
junior high
Though now it all seems rather
bland
Read John O’Hara’s epic tales
pad ape Pe ohn Rechy’s
qualid w
“The Bastion wloiver Hotel” is
mand—
Atory for the Kitten of
ob Gover’s unrequited love.
(A hundred bucks? Misunder-
stand?)
At acd with luck I’ve found the
like
And Mailer’ 3s “Time of Her
Time” and
Finales from a Spillane thriller,
Makes “Fanny Hill” come out
“Lo
As Maer as Chaucer’s “Tale of
pee enough to pass from hand
co hand without the rank of
ar
(The French tradition: Vol-
ire’s “Can
Ide” detiad "ally.
of that?
pa try “The Girl from Pussy-
You’re tired
at ral a book, the str.
iii wes ch is that this nie (by
Of Pennie Candy)’s got her
by virtues head, no troubled
Ebenezer Cooke’s in-
s “Sot Weed
aut just 2 passion to get
e
Brea “Baby Doll” and “Pey-
ton Place”
Poor Pennie cannot lose her
except “Tristram
and—
y” is untouched by Ted Mark’s
wit,
From his lampooning of
“Lolit—
a” to R. TB aay band.
“The bee of Loneliness’ gets
blow:
And Brett Ashley gets her own
(it’s Earnie Hemingway’s own
brand.)
Assignment:
LONDON
June 1966
Who are we kidding:—This is strictly a
job for 727. A job for the tough, rugged
. Maybe we
could stretch a point. Oh go on—try it.
Phone up the Charterflight Secretary
Today. He’s not in the yellow pages.
Dial 466-0724 after 6 or drop him a note
in the CUS office in the Students’ Union
and the smooth. Well.
Building.
®Fly now—Pay later Plan Available
Just $35.00 Down
AR DA ip.
The Students’ Union
The University of
CHARTERFLY
MEN’S WORK CLOTHES
LUGGAGE
MEN’S BOOTS AND SHOES
CHAPMAN BROS. LTD.
10421 Whyte Avenue
EDMONTON, ALBERTA
Largest selection of brief cases in Edmonton
Prices $7.95 — $19.95 3
Box Trunks 36” $23.95 to $29.95
Cowboy King and Lee pants — $6.95
Jackets to match pants — $7.50—$7.95
THE GATEWAY, Thursday, January 20, 1966 3
The novel’s tone—or it is
timbre?—
Declines a theme “forever
amber”
You could say that it’s been
fanned.
The non-aspiring reader will
now number his lines, having
surely by this time realized that
the following notes are truly
essential.
L. 3. “Warren spahned”, See
Peace”. The rest of the line de-
fies exegesis, but Chief Justice
arren is not necessarily being
pores
7. Homage to Ogden Nash:
“Candy. is dandy but likker is
quicker
L. 9. “B.OP.”: The Board of
Objectionable Publications. This
board does not ban books. It
merely suggests that it would
prefer book distributors to prefer
not to distribute suggestive litera-
ture.
L. 10. See all possible Millers’
tails: Henry, Arthur, Chaucer’s,
Joe, et Al.
L. 12. Not Anne but William.
See: Kafka’s * ‘Das Sandpiper”.
L. 17. “ECHT”: not to be con-
fused with Bertolt, this German
word means “real”, as in Echt-
Deutchegrammophon, or Das
Echt-McCoy.
L. 18. Mr. Whyte has forgotten
who wrote “The Passion Flower
Hotel”. -
Ll, 18-19. “man/Datory”: Not
to be confused with Mandy Rice-
Davies, who merely undermanned
a Tory. ut that was really
Christine Keeler. Keep clear the
distinction between Mandy and
Shandy, and never confuse keel
with Sterne (1.41).
19-21. Robert Gover: “The
$100 ses oe emepi Do you?
eek oa American
ia Miets ould t be con-
fused with ey “Feel”, “Smell”,
and “Insight”.
OUTER LIMITS,
TOP BANDS
Dancing—Fri., Sat., 9-1:30
Folksinging—Sun., 8-11 p.m.
All sorts of snacks and refreshments
—For Reservations—
Phone 488-3428
L. 24. Put the accent on “her”.
See eae and the Western Man”
by P. Wyndham Luce.
L. 26. ih i Bill Miller.
L. 29. See T. S. Eliot, “The
French Tradition and the In-
dividual Talent”. Or vide la
‘rance!
L. 31, This line is an explicit
statement of the theme of this
eview. Disregard all pseudo-
eae statements.
. “Strand”: i.e. one strand
ing pro-
cess”. Cf. Virginia eee “The
c
tangled wee Beatrice cas Syd-
ney) we we:
L. 36. “Intacter” ‘is neither a
Latin adverb: nor a_ troubled
gland, but is rather the com-
parative of the verb “to on
(a French infinitive
ee of the maainteee of
mch Canada’s political and
sabroney rites.)
L. 37. Since the original foot-
note to this line happened to
rhyme with the preceding line
(1. 36), it was incorporated into
the line itself, thus necessitating
this footnote.
Ts. 38; “Manned”: _from the
verb “to man”. Cf.
participle. There,
EC? But though you have press-
ed on this far, do not pass 1. 39;
go back to 1. 38, and meditate as it
penetrates. *
L.° 39. “Baby Doll” is by
authority of Tennessee William:
and Rudy Vallee “Peyton Place”
is by Grace Metamorphoses. Vide
Kafka and Ovid simultaneously.
L. 41. Proceed quickly to 1. 42.
“Tristram Shandy” is by the
Lawrence Strene of the footnote
o ll. 18-19.
L. 42. Remember Ted Mark?
Vide introduction to this review,
SUPRA.
L. 43. “Lolit”: not to. be con-
Leavis alone in our great tradi-
tion?” Can the reader spot seven
types of ambiguity in this sent-
ence? (Caveat Empson!) If the
reader believes he has spotted
seven, he is entitled to a free copy
of “The Girl Pal ig Pussycat” (1.
31). tok C. I. A. Richards.
L. 45. An ste line. Those
under 18 years will disregard.
Please.
L. 46. Brett Ashley: a character
in “The Sun Also Rises”. But the
Empson never sets on the OED.
47. “Brand”: a play by Ibsen,
L. 48. “Timbr re”: an obscure
musical instrument, carved from
Burnam Wood. See l. 49, “for-
L. 49, “declines”: see, decline,
“theme”: see 1. 31. “for-
ever’: and forever and forever
creeps with petty pace from day
to day to L. 4 - Wood.)
L. 50. “fanned”: the “pale fire”
is the shade of Kineaide laid.
(Vide: Benerable, the.)
Damyaall, godamya eyes:
Bonjour, Tristram. Mandy,
ghandi, shandy.
—The Whyte Company
PHYSICAL SCIENCES
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
SOCIAL SCIENCES
Dalhousie Graduate rds, Dalho'
Visiting Fe Sow snipe
in the Hi
as
in all field:
Up to $5, 000. 00 for Visi
Travel Allowances for Can
ee0ccee ce
2 a
ie Graduate Awards.
Application forms
DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY, HALIFAX, CANADA
Graduate Student Award
The Faculty of Graduate Studies eae applications by March 15 for
Dal
housie Post-doctoral Fellowships in the Sci
for Terminating Graduate Spudents ann new Ph.D
's and Social Sciences.
$3,000.00 Honours Graduate Entrance Scholarships (12 month
perio
Up to $2,400. 00 for Master’s Students. (12 month period).
Dalhousie Centennial Fellowships of $3,600.00 for Post-Masters
Ss.
.00 for continuing Ph.D. Students.
iting Fellowships in the belie ae va!
,00 for Postdoctoral Fellows in the Sciences.
.00 for Research Assoc
den:
Research omer for Postdoctoral Fellows.
, the Dalhousie tae? Fea Fellowships,
The Dalhous
the Visiting Pelio lowships for Terminat ing
Ph.D.’s in t ‘um:
le,
nding. Additional special awards are
and further information may be obtained from the ©
pe an of Graduate Studies, Darigunia University, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
OCEANOGRAPHY
MEDICAL SCIENCES
HUMANITIES
esearch Fellows to an jal-
ences, an ay 1 Wns
Graduate Students and new
Dalhousie Post-
of any recognized university
4 THE GATEWAY, Thursday, January 20, 1966
Role of adult education expands
The most rapidly expanding are’
of education is adult Ciena
Mr. G. A. Eyford, assistant dir-
val Be void U of A extension de-
mphasized the role of
ani icctine in ee society.
The most popular courses
those relating directly to Paoplee
jobs he sai
Courses such as computer pro-
graming, engineering, cat man-
illed nh eid
aT harder to fill he said.
e all the courses must pay
for “themselves, there must a
number registered in a
graduate or graduate training he
said. There are from 2,500 oy 3,000
students register in no -credit
courses offered be the 5 ce Roh br
Kup Kul
SALONS LTD.
“Through Whose Doors Pass Edmonton’s
Most Beautiful Women?’
OFFICE ONLY
14703 - 87th Avenue
Phone: 488-8892
LYNWOOD
ALO’
OTTEWELL
SALON
6128 - 90th Avenue
Phone: 469-6861
Ss N WINDSOR PARK
14903 - 89th Avenue aap
i 11706 - 87th Avenue
Phone: 489-6431 1284
Phone: 439-
WOODCROFT LLENI
SALON AMSALON
11561 - 130th Street th St
Phone: 489- 7527 “Phone: 4 Sates
ROSE ANN’S FORT R ROAD
SALON
- 87th Avenue
15008 12346 Fort Road
Phone: 489-7527
Phone: 479-6991
RETAILERS TO THRIFTY CANADIANS
Fast Promotion tor Young
Men in Reteil Management
Here is a career opportunity where your initiative
and personal talents will be appreciated and re-
warded. You will receive on-the-job training
designed to prepare you for rapid advancement.
Promotion is from within the company, and is
based on individual performance.
If you are graduating in the faculty of Commerce,
Arts or Science.
opie zou possess leadership ability and self-confi-
en
If you possess imagination, ambition, and an
interest in people.
If you are able and willing to accept periodic
expense-paid transfers.
Consider a career with Zeller’s Limited, a growing
Canadian Retail Company with over 100 stores in
more than 70 cities. Success in the Training Pro-
gramme leads to Store Management or to other
executive positions.
Starting salary will be commensurate with your
qualifications and experience. Employee benefits
melide: Pension Plan, Group Life and Health
Insurance, Profit Sharing, and Summer and Winter
Vacations.
Visit the Placement Office to learn more about
the career opportunities with Zeller’s, and to
arrange an interview with a company represen-
tative who will be on campus on:
Jan. 25, 1966
course before it is offered or the
fees must be raised Mr. Eyford
said.
One course being offered now is
comparative government. Top men
e field will deal with the
government and politics of
countries such as Canada, the U.S.
United Kingdom, USSR, France,
and emergent nations. Contributing
an,
Dawson, F. G. Hulmes, N
ton, and S. M. M. Qureshi
U of A student to attend
summer seminar in Turkey
U of A student David Parsons,
orld University
urkey this
The Canadian group, headed by
Paul
Cantor and Robert Panet-Ray-
mond, will leave June 20 for a two
month trip. ;
They will first go to Istanbul for
the seminar and a tour of Turkey
followed by two weeks of free
travelling.
This year delegates were chosen
sis. e
people sya Diet
The d conference delegates
have oe ane ded into five study
groups Seer ee gt each student’s
interest, ust submit a
5,000 word ee to the seminar.
Short shorts
TRAVEL SEMINA
Applications are now being accepted
for the Travel and Education seminars
in eastern Seeanie: during a three-week
i pring, sponsored by the
orld University Service of Canada.
Forms available in ‘Major Hooper’s
Office; deadline for applications is to-
day. urther information from Blaine
Thacken 434- 7294.
PALACES AND | KINGS.
Prof. H. P Liebel of the depart-
other
western philosophies of history ve ee
8:15 p.m. meeting in med sci
UKRAINE EXCHANGE
Students wishing 9 take part in an
University Ry the Dieaine next
submit their applications
e the Kiev exchange seeps ter ittee before
ts final meeting 11 a.m. Friday
nee Applications mR invited from
students in any faculty, but applicants
mormn-
Dr. James E. Tchir
Optometris!
401 Tegler egies
Edmonton, Alberta
Telephone 422-2856
t have a full knowledge of the
n
r members of the exchange
committee.
STUDENT CINEMA
Student Cinema presents the feature
film ‘The Interns” Friday at 7 p.m.,
in mp 126. ee as % 35 cents.
Kate oer ASSEMB
lub is sees receiving ap-
bicateons from students to represent
nations in the yeeren model United
dsl General Ass
Se gmeears Applications may be pick-
e e
of: im
SEMINAR APPLICATION NS
A Canadian Native Seminar will be
n Pp an. 28-30.
speakers will deal with civil rights,
education, and religion of the ae
ndian. Registration fee is $:
one ere iasen shee apply in SUB
108 before Jan
SUMMER TRAVEL
The Kneller Foundation eri
several travel awards to of A
dents to provide ae pa ebEreniy, ne
ing, extra-curricular activities, and
McMASTER UNIVERS
GRADUATE TEACHING FELLOWSHIPS
The University offers Graduate Teaching Fellowships to support grad-
uate students working towards a Master’s Degree in Bio
assics, Economics, German, Gr reek,
physics, Civil Engineering, Class:
mistry, Bio-
Latin,
Mechanical Engineering, Metallurgical Engineering, Philosophy, 1 Political
angua:
Science, Romance
logy; and for a Master’s or Doctor of Philosophy D
ges, Russian, Sociology ae Social An
ree in Biology,
eg
Chemical st ear Scere Chemical Physics, Chemistry, Electrical ore
eering, English, Geochemistry, Geography, Geology, History, Mathematics,
Metal
Sciences
lurgy, Molecular Biology, Physics, Psychology and the. Religious
The "Fellowships vary in value but in all cases the cb ona provide
adequate support for a full year’s study. Most awards ar
.subsequent years. Holders of pelgrenive will devote epprowinatels one-
fifth of their time to instructional dutie:
renewable for
ravel advances are available to Basia students who are coming to the
University from distant points.
er information and application forms may be obtained from:
The Dean of Graduate Studies.
McMaster University, Hafailten, Ontario, Canada.
Guest -
eign shay road The tour will last
tw onths, al composed of
aviennne and an aa tudents.
Interested students should apply in
person to the Administrator of Student
Awards by eS 9 =
*
CONSERVATIVE CLU
Peter Lougheed will speak to the
An impo: ortant epee meeting of the
club will be held Sunday at 1 p.m.
in the Gold Key Ortice in SuB.
ODEr PARLIA
MENT
er-Party mmittee of the
Political Selence tub ae meet Mon
be considered after | the. above date
NEWMAN CLUB
A Bible vigil will be held aa Sa
Joseph’s Chapel Sunday 330
Dorothy Philips, head of the Marian
Cen re x onton will speak on:
“The Poor, Whose Responsibility?”
ip) dobar re WREST LING
deadline for entries ties intra-
f 8.
nics, compuls
as not wrestled before,
will be held Feb. 1 and 8 at 7:30 p.m.
in the wrestling room.
* *
Sina CLUB
organizational meeting of
Microbiology eS e <
lay, at room 3130 in the
Medical Building. All staff and stu-
dents interested in microbiology are
welcome
cd s o
UNIVERSITY CONCERT BAN
e Barber a Saville, Peter and the
Wolf. and the Hot Canary will be the
guests see the University Corbert Ban
Friday n
ther pica to be played are South
Pacific, Camelot, on Light
he
Cava an
program starts at 8 p.m Aainlan ion
YARDBIRD surT
A hootenany fentiting Verna Semo-
Pat
t e Lar Mori rio, and
Hughes will be held Friday, Saturday,
the pag
‘ogram begins at 9 p.m
sponsored y the Canadian Youth
ostel Association.
ALBERTA
Programmers
Interview Dates:—
PROVINCE OF
EMPLOYMENT INTERVIEWS
For 1966 Graduates in the following fields:
Personnel Administration Officers
Water Resources Engineers
Labour Research Officers
Museum Personnel
Agricultural Instructors
Land Appraisers (Summer Employment)
Social Workers (Permanent and Summer
January 18 to February 2, 1966. Please consult
your university recruiting office for specific times.
Emplyoment)
BAYDALA DRUG
(Parkade)
Corner 103 St. and Jasper Ave.
OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT
7 DAYS A WEEK
SOCIAL
CREDIT
By
C. H. Douglas
Here is a timely reprint of the dy-
namic concepts formulated by Maj-
or Douglas to meet the Political and
Economic crises of the Powe
arn why A
y well end
the impossible per of the futile
LEFT-RIGHT confli :
—$3.00 or 10 for $18,00—
OMNI PUBLICATIONS
P.O. Bo
Hawthorne, Calif Men